In these circumstances Inglis, the agricultural tenant, brings an action against the landlord stating the injury he has suffered by rabbits, and claiming damages for these three years. Defences were lodged, and a similar action was brought by Turnbull, a tenant of an adjoining farm under the same landlord. In the Sheriff-Substitute's note to an interlocutor in the latter case, which is referred to in the note to his interlocutor in this case of October 15, 1869, he says—“The Sheriff-Substitute would hazard this other remark, that before incurring further expense in this cause, the pursuer should deliberately consider whether he is suing the proper party, or is right in bringing the defenders only into the field.” On that hint the pursuer acted, and brought a supplementary summons against Mr Gunnis, the game tenant. The actions were then conjoined, and, after proof, the Sheriff-Substitute decerned against both defenders, and, on appeal, the Sheriff assoilzied both.
In regard to the claim against Mr Gunnis, to whom the shootings were let, I am of opinion that the Sheriff's judgment is right, and that the case against him has failed. There are two grounds of action alleged by the pursuer against him—the first, which is stated in the 7th article of the condescendence, to the effect “that by exterminating the vermin and preserving the rabbits he increased the stock during these three seasons to an enormous extent from the amount on the farm when it was taken by the pursuer.” That is the first ground. The second, as stated in article 8th of
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The first of these grounds must be founded on contract or quasi contract. It assumes an obligation on the part of Mr Gunnis, undertaken to the agricultural tenant to destroy the rabbits or not to destroy the vermin on the farm. But Mr Gunnis never undertook any such obligation. The lease of the shootings which Mr Gunnis held merely communicated to him the proprietor's personal privilege of destroying wild animals on the farm, and traversing the lands for that purpose. The lessee obtained by this lease no right either in the lands or in the fruits of the lands. Although the soil might be let to a tenant for the purposes of cultivation, no contract relation was constituted between the lessee of the lands and the assignee of the shooting privilege. If not prohibited by the lease, the agricultural tenant was entitled to kill the rabbits on his farm whether the shootings were let or unlet. If the tenant of the shootings did any personal act to the injury of the agricultural tenant, such as treading down his corn or breaking down his fences, he would be responsible. And so, if the agricultural tenant were to encourage his dogs or his hinds to scour the covers to the injury of the game, he might be responsible to the assignee of the shooting privilege. But the latter is under no obligation to kill rabbits for the benefit of the crops of the former, nor is the former bound, although of course he is entitled, to kill the owls, or weasels, or polecats which may damage the game. There is no mutual obligation between them. Neither the omission to kill rabbits, nor the destruction of vermin, which are matters entirely within the power of the game tenant to do or to omit, can give the agricultural tenant any just cause of action. His claim lies against his own landlord, under the contract with him, which is neither enlarged nor restricted by the rights given to the tenant of the shootings.
There may no doubt be an ulterior question underlying all this, springing out of the general principle that no man can so use his property as to injure his neighbour. It may be maintained that no one is entitled to keep on his property an unreasonable amount of destructive animals if the lands in the vicinity are thereby injured. I desire to give no opinion as to whether cases may exist between adjacent proprietors which may fall under this principle. But before the question could arise it would be necessary to allege and prove a deliberate and excessive harbouring of wild animals with a view to their multiplication. But no such case can arise here: The proof shows that whatever stock Mr Gunnis found on the farm, he did nothing to increase, and in the latter years much to diminish it.
But it is said, in the second place, that Mr Gunnis prevented the pursuer from shooting the rabbits on the farm, and that he has, consequently, made himself liable for the damage done by them. Now, it is not necessary to say that if there had been, on the part of the tenant, a persistent attempt to shoot the rabbits, and a persistent obstruction on the part of Mr Gunnis, there might not have arisen a claim of damage. But the facts do not disclose any such state of matters. There never was a persistent attempt by the pursuer to shoot, and there never was any persistent refusal by Mr Gunnis to permit shooting. If the pursuer had intended to make this a separate ground of action, he should have taken care to insist on his right, and to have done so with the intention of bringing it to a distinct solution. He never did so, and I do not believe that he ever meant to do so; and Mr Gunnis says that if he had been applied to the leave would have been granted.
Lastly, as regards the case against the game tenant, I am of opinion that the clause in his lease relative to not giving rise to claims by tenants is one with which the pursuer has no concern; and on the whole, I am of opinion that Mr Gunnis must be assoilzied.
This leaves the question as it was originally raised in the summons against the landlord; and I have now to consider how far any case is established against him and his tutors.
In regard to this claim, it is necessary to keep in mind the legal principles which apply to it. In the first place, rabbits are not game. That was quite clearly decided in the case of Moncrieff v. Arnot in 1828, and has been held as law ever since. It was suggested at the bar that the case of North in 1864 threw some doubt on this doctrine; but in reality that decision in no degree affects the question. The question raised in that case was one solely between the proprietor and the tenant of the shootings. The proprietor had reserved in his own hands the rabbits in his agricultural leases, and had let to Mr North the whole shootings of every description. He subsequently gave to his agricultural tenants privileges in regard to the rabbits, and the lessee of the shootings maintained that this was inconsistent with the grant to him. And so the Court found. But there was nothing in that decision inconsistent with the general proposition that rabbits are not game. That they are not so is rendered certain both by the Revenue Statutes and the Night Poaching Act. In the second place, it necessarily follows that if the tenant is put under no restriction by the terms of his lease, he is entitled to destroy rabbits as an ordinary agricultural operation necessary to the cultivation of the farm; and if so, that he is not entitled either to require the landlord to destroy the rabbits or to claim damages for the injury done by them. But, thirdly, I am very clearly of opinion that a landlord cannot both reserve covers for game preservation within or around the land which he has let for agricultural purposes, and at the same time answer such demands as this, in regard to depredations by rabbits, by the plea that the tenant had the remedy in his own hand. If there be one fact which is clearly proved in the course of the evidence in this case, it is that the covers sheltered the rabbits, and that the rabbits multiplied in the covers. It may perhaps be said to be more assumed than proved in the evidence; but every witness who is examined speaks to what it really required little testimony to establish. I am of opinion, therefore, that in the present case the reservation of the covers on the farm rendered the landlord as much responsible for an unreasonable stock of rabbits as if he had reserved them along with the game in the lease; and the only question which remains is, Whether, during the years libelled, that stock was unreasonable?
I am very clearly of opinion that during the years 1865–66 it was entirely unreasonable, and that the landlord, consequently, is liable for damages for that year and part of the next. It is said, indeed, that if the tenant had been allowed to shoot, the rabbits might have been kept down
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I am therefore of opinion that, to the extent to which the stock of rabbits was excessive, the landlord is liable in this case, on the principle which has ruled the decisions from the case of Moncrieff downwards; and that practically it is impossible, as regards rabbits, for a landlord both to reserve for purposes of sport, and still more of profit, the covers where rabbits are bred, and yet to exact, without compensation, full rents from the tenant on whose crops they are maintained in life. The case is, of course, all the stronger when the rabbits, which eat the corn and destroy the turnips, yield a second rent to the proprietor from the hands of a third party.
But, on the other hand, the tenant has some things in his power in regard to this matter. I have no idea that he is entitled to act upon the advice which I see the pursuer received in this case, when he was told that if he killed the rabbits he would have no claim for damages, but that he would if he refrained. Wherever a tenant is entitled to go on his farm, then he is entitled to kill rabbits as he is entitled to kill rats, unless he be prohibited by the lease; and he is not entitled to omit reasonable exertion on the one hand, and claim compensation for the injury done to his crops on the other. On reading this proof I am satisfied that for the season 1865–66, and for the next half-year, there was an unreasonable accumulation of rabbits on this farm, for which I think the landlord is responsible. For the remainder of the time I think the stock was considerably reduced; and not being satisfied that the tenant has proved the existence of an unreasonable amount during this period, I am not prepared to alter the Sheriff's judgment in regard to it. I think we should allow the pursuer £30 in all in name of damages.
Lord Cowan —As to the position of the game tenant, called as defender in the supplementary action, I concur in the views of your Lordship so entirely as to make it unnecessary for me to say anything.
The real question relates to the alleged liability of the landlord to the pursuer for the damages claimed in the summons; and I do not think the principles on which this question falls to be decided doubtful.
It must be held to be quite fixed that, where there is no stipulation to the contrary, and no obligation, express or implied, to the effect that the landlord has reserved to himself the rabbits on a farm,—the agricultural tenant is entitled, at common law, to kill them, and so to protect himself against damages to the crops. This was authoritatively decided in the case of Arnott v. Moncrieff , and has been recognised in subsequent cases. But the consequence of this right in the tenant is to exclude him from claiming damages from his landlord on account of damage suffered from the ravages of rabbits—it being his own fault that he has not kept down the stock of rabbits on the farm. So much on the one hand.
But, on the other hand, when, under his lease, the tenant is debarred from destroying rabbits, the landlord will be responsible to him for the damage caused by them when they have been allowed to increase to an unusual and excessive amount.
Taking these principles as fixed, I would have been inclined to affirm the judgment of the Sheriff under review, were it not for the specialties which exist in this case. By the lease between the landlord and his agricultural tenant there is reserved to the pursuer “the whole woods and plantations on the foresaid farm and land,” and there is also reserved power and liberty to him, during the currency of the tack, “to resume possession of such part or parts of the farm and lands hereby let as he or they may require for planting and enclosing.” Under this reserved power about six acres of ground were resumed in 1853 or 1854, and planted by the landlord. And subsequently an additional quantity of land was resumed, to the extent of upwards of 20 acres. There was thus a considerable extent of land retained in possession of the landlord as plantation, from which the right of the tenant under his lease was excluded. The landlord alone, or those authorised by him, could enter into these enclosures. But these were the very best cover for rabbits on the lands, and the tenant having no power to enter them, was virtually debarred from killing them on that part of his farm. The landlord alone could keep down the stock so as to be within reasonable bounds, having regard to the size of the farm. And it is for inquiry whether, on the proof, it is established that during the three years set forth in the summons there was damage truly suffered by the tenant through a superabundant, stock of rabbits, and whether the increase may not be traced to the existence of these protected enclosures. In that case it seems to me consistent with the principles stated, that damage therefrom suffered should be made good to the tenant by the landlord.
On the proof, I think it is sufficiently established that during the years 1866 and 1867, but more especially in 1866, being the first year for which damage is claimed, there was an excessive number of rabbits on the farm. The game tenant employed a man (Connell) to keep down the stock of rabbits. He says that it was in October 1866 that he began operations, remaining till the beginning of April following; and his statement is—“The stock was too heavy for the estate when I first went to it, and required to be reduced, but they were pretty well down, when I left the first year.” And he proceeds to explain the state of matters in the two following years, till, as he says, at the close of his engagement the stock of rabbits was reasonably reduced. These statements appear to me to be substantially consistent with the rest of the evidence. For the damage done in 1865 payment had been made to the tenant by the landlord; and as for the years 1866 and 1867 there was no effective measures resorted to by the landlord to reduce the excess of stock on the farm, I think there is room so far for the claim advanced in this action.
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There is, no doubt, difficulty in ascertaining how far the excessive stock in the year 1866 and 1867 arose from the cover afforded by the plantations, and there is room for doubting whether the whole amount of damage claimed by the tenant should be allowed him, seeing that the tenant abstained from killing rabbits on his farm, as he was entitled to do. This must be equitably and reasonably judged of from the whole proof, as in a jury question; and, on the whole, I concur in the judgment which your Lordship proposes.
Lord Benholme concurred.
Lord Neaves —I concur. In the argument an important general question was raised, which we should notice, although it is not necessary for the decision of the case. It was contended that, apart from contract, a proprietor of land is responsible for any wrongful act in connection with his land. It requires a strong case to make a man liable for the use of his own property. But if he erects a dam on a stream, and the construction is so defective that the water overflows and injures his neighbour, he will be answerable for the injury which arises. If, again, he were to keep noxious animals, such as wolves, and they attacked a neighbour's flock, he would be bound to make good the damage. In the case even of tame animals the proprietor would be responsible. Where the property has been put to an unnatural use the owner is answerable. But I cannot say that, if a proprietor has ground which in its natural uses may be occupied by rabbits or wood pigeons, he is in every case to be responsible for damage arising from those animals. Laying out of view the fact of the possession of the game tenant, I do not see how he can be held responsible. He was under no contract to keep down the rabbits. It is not said that he did anything to make him answerable. His fault is rather said to consist in faciendo , and to make him liable he would require to have entered into some contract. But I think he seems to have done what he could to keep down the rabbits. It is said that he prevented the tenant from destroying the rabbits, but I do not think there was any such persistent attempt to prevent the tenant shooting as would give him right to claim damages. The tenant was merely told by Mr Gunnis' gamekeeper that he had no right to shoot, and this amounted to no more than an advice as to what his rights were. He followed the advice given by the gamekeepers, contrary to his own view of his rights, and that will not give him a claim against the game tenant. Therefore I concur in thinking that Mr Gunnis is not answerable.
As to the landlord I also concur. This is not a case between strangers, but between parties who have entered into a contract of location of land, in which bona fide is implied on both sides. If the landlord failed in doing what is necessary for the tenant's proper enjoyment of his right, he commits a fault which entitles the tenant to reparation. I should be sorry to say anything which would discourage planting, but if the consequence of the landlord exercising this right is that the rabbits so increase as to become a plague to the tenant, I think he is bound to exercise the right reasonably, so as to keep faith with the tenant whose crops they live on. This is only equitable, especially when the landlord gets rent from the game tenant partly for the rabbits. There is enough to show a remissness on the part of the landlord in carrying out the planting—not taking care that the rabbits should not be allowed to increase. It is fair that the rabbits should be kept down. As far as the tenant has right to destroy the rabbits, so far he cannot claim damages for their improper increase. If his right is not taken away, he has the remedy in his own hands, and if he does not use it, he can have no claim for damages. He may be exceedingly glad to have the rabbit damage as an excuse for not paying his rent, but if he refrains from using his right he will not have a claim for the damage.
The result is, that the game tenant should be assoilzied, and the agricultural tenant held entitled to the damage from the landlord.
Solicitors: Agent for Appellants— A. J. Davidson, S.S.C.
Agents for the Landlord— Dundas & Wilson, C.S.
Agents for the Game Tenant— Millar, Allardice, & Robson, W.S.